Thank you, Dan. I wanted to first point out a few -- a bit of new information that we added this quarter to further illustrate some of the points Dan made on our deposit base and liquidity position. Specifically, included in our slide deck on Pages 4, 5, and 6 -- slides 4, 5, and 6. Dan mentioned 70% of our deposit base being either fully insured or collateralized. The top left graph on Slide 4 shows the components of this calculation. One of the points of confusion that we saw in some of the early screens they were published on this topic was the lack of adjustment for collateralized public funds, which in our case is a fairly meaningful number at approximately $6 billion as of the end of the first quarter. When you take this into account, we compare very favorably with peers with over 70% of our deposits being either insured or collateralized. Further our contingent funding availability which is shown in the slides as well is over 50% greater than our uninsured and collateralized deposit total. Slide 5 speaks to the diversity and granularity of our core deposit base. Over 75% of our deposit balances are within our Community Bank structure and over 85% of our deposit accounts are consumer accounts. Additionally, the nature of our deposits are tenured, with over 70% having been with the bank over five years including over 50% that have been with us for over 10 years. We are very proud of our granular deposit base and a longstanding relationships that exists between all of our customers and bankers. Regarding our $10.9 billion securities portfolio it continues to be, as it has been historically fully categorized is available for sale, but any fair value adjustments transparently reflected on the balance sheet. We have always believed balance sheet flexibility is important and that flexibility allowed us to execute on the accretive security sale in the first quarter without any negative implications to the rest of the portfolio. A securities book representing just over 20% of our assets is made up of highly liquid largely government backed securities with an effective duration of just over four years. Given the nature of the investments, it provides solid cash flows on an ongoing basis and we anticipate approximately $1.5 billion in cash flows to come off the portfolio for the rest of 2023. This can be used to support higher yielding loan growth or other investments. Moving on to the components of our net income for the quarter. And looking at Slides 12 and Slide 13, we reported net interest income of $354 million for the first quarter, a decline of $5 million compared to the fourth quarter of 2022. First quarter has two fewer days in the fourth quarter and each day is worth about $4 million in net interest income. So excluding the day count, we would have increased around $3 million linked quarter due to the strong loan growth and positive impact of higher rates on our earning assets. Our net interest margin was 3.29% for the first quarter, down just 4 basis points from the linked quarter. On a net basis the decline in the margin was simply due to the excess liquidity that we added to the balance sheet in March. With the impact of what I would call routine higher funding costs offset by the improvement in earning asset yields. Our total cost of deposits increased to 1.28% from 76 basis points in the quarter. As expected, we continue to see migration from non-interest bearing products to interest bearing which is reflected in a linked quarter decline in our percentage of non-interest bearing deposits from 32.7% at year-end 29.2% at the end of the first quarter. Although this quarter's ratio was somewhat impacted by the late quarter addition of $1.6 billion of brokered CDs. Our total deposit beta was 59% for the first quarter and now stands at 25% cycle-to-date on a cumulative basis. This compares to the first quarter's loan beta, excluding accretion at 53% and 41% cycle-to-date. Our yield on net loans excluding accretion was 5.87%, up 47 basis points from the prior quarter. That's a lot of information, but when you step back we are very pleased with our ability to continue to grow net interest income on a per day basis, continuing to grow loans and improve our earning asset yields to offset funding pressure. Looking out over the rest of this year, we currently anticipate our margin to trend pretty stable to potentially upward, if our deposit assumptions hold including a cumulative deposit beta of 30%. Non-interest revenue highlighted in Slide 15 was $74.1 million, which includes the security loss that Dan mentioned earlier. Excluding this item, non-interest revenue was $125.3 million for the quarter, which is a $9.9 million increase comparable to the fourth quarter. Insurance commission revenue is responsible for approximately $5 million of the increase as fourth quarter is the lowest quarter each year from a seasonality standpoint. Insurance continues to perform very well for us from both retention and pricing perspective, which is reflected in the year-over-year quarter growth rate of 11%. Mortgage revenue was also up $3 million and it increased due to increased origination revenue and a decrease in payoffs and paydowns. Card and merchant fee revenue declined this quarter due both to the seasonality of transaction volumes as well as the impact of the fourth quarter additional $2.5 million benefit related to annual vendor incentives. Finally, we had a $6.4 million linked quarter increase in other non-interest revenue. This increase was really driven by various items in the blend of $2 million range including Federal Home Loan Bank dividend income, SBA volume and credit-related fees. Moving on to expenses, which are highlighted on Slides 16 and 17. Total adjusted non-interest expense increased from $279.3 million for the fourth quarter of 2022 to $305.2 million for the first quarter of 2023. If you recall, our fourth quarter conference call, we indicated that the run rate was closer to $290 million when you factored out various year end accrual adjustments. Approximately $7.3 million of which was related to employee benefits. In addition to this variance, approximately $5 million of the change in salaries and benefits this quarter was related to seasonal increases in payroll taxes, primarily from the FICA resets with the majority of the rest of the increase driven by increases in insurance commissions linked to strong revenue this quarter. The linked quarter increase of $2.4 million in FDIC insurance is, of course, largely driven by the 2 basis point increase in the assessment rate effective in the first quarter. Well, there are several other puts and takes, the increase in other miscellaneous expense is a result of a number of items including the impact of a fourth quarter benefit of $1.6 million related to franchise taxes and regarding first quarter items we had an increase in fraud losses of $2.4 million, which is in the process of collection over the coming quarters. In addition, the portion of pension expense that is recorded in other expense increased $1.7 million as a result of higher interest rates impacting the discount rate. SBA expense also increased about $1.6 million on increased volume which also positively impacted the revenue as I mentioned earlier. The remainder of the increases were driven by various smaller items, several of which we detailed in the slide deck. Going forward, we expect second quarter adjusted expenses to be below $300 million and closer to that $290 million base level we discussed last quarter and trend downward from there, the latter half of the year as the impact of the branch optimization and other efficiencies realized, partially offset by the third quarter of merit cycle. Our longer term efficiency ratio target remains below 54%. Regarding the non-routine adjusted items merger and merger-related costs were $14 million, which is a significant decline from the $53 million in the fourth quarter period that included our franchise rebranding and core system conversion. The largest component of the first quarter total is related to one-time employee compensation agreements and certain trailing system decommissioning costs. We expect these merger and merger-related costs to decline by more than half in the second quarter and continue to dwindle when they complete later this year. Finally, some additional color on the credit picture which is shown on Slides 10 and 11. We are pleased to see net charge-offs continue to hold at low levels, totaling just $1.9 million or 2 basis points annualized for the first quarter. As Dan mentioned, we had a provision of $10 million for the quarter, which was necessary to support the loan growth we reported for the quarter resulting in a stable ACL coverage of 1.45% of loans. NPAs as a percent of assets ticked up compared to the fourth quarter, but it's relatively flat with the first quarter of 2022 and continue to compare favorably to historical levels. From a non-performing perspective the increase was driven by two larger C&I credits and additionally, approximately $12 million of the increase was the repurchase of government guaranteed loans primarily SBA that we previously sold in order to fulfill our collection obligations. It is important to note that $43 million of our total NPAs are government guaranteed SBA and FHA loans that were required to repurchase while working through the collection process. These do have a longer resolution cycle, but a significant portion of these dollars in excess of 75% are guaranteed from a loss perspective. So, given our active participation in these markets that does elevate our non-performing numbers somewhat. From a credit-sized loan perspective, we are seeing some impact in grade migration as we collect year-end financial information and incorporated into our credit models. We have referenced in past calls that our expectation is that interest rates may have some impact on credit and while we are seeing it in some of the grade migration we are also seeing stable past dues across all geographies and business lines. In short, we have not experienced any systemic trends or themes and types of loans geographies, et cetera and results to-date align with expected grade migration for a credit cycle with increased rates. So looking back at what was an interesting quarter for the industry, our performance highlighted the broad strength of our balance sheet, our resilient net interest margin and fee revenue streams and the clear differentiating value of our customer relationships having both a rural and metro footprint and a community plus corporate business mix. We also demonstrated our commitment to refining our branch footprint and driving ongoing operating efficiency, a theme that is a key focus for us, particularly through the rest of this year and into next. Operator, we would like to now open the call for questions.